
Correlation between radiography and motions of foot and ankle during gait using 3D multi‐segment foot model
Author(s) -
Lee Dong Yeon,
Seo Sang Gyo,
Kim JiBeom,
Kim Sung Ju,
Choi In Ho
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of foot and ankle research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.763
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 1757-1146
DOI - 10.1186/1757-1146-7-s1-a132
Subject(s) - medicine , foot (prosody) , gait , ankle , radiography , physical medicine and rehabilitation , correlation , orthopedic surgery , gait analysis , rehabilitation , orthodontics , physical therapy , radiology , anatomy , surgery , mathematics , geometry , philosophy , linguistics
Results The following are the findings. Firstly, the total time taken for forward breakfall of the martial arts showed 1.53±0.04 s for skilled, and 1.41±0.06s for unskilled subjects (p<.01). Second, during forward breakfall of the martial arts, the skilled subjects came up with significantly faster impact velocity in the primary point of impact (E2) (p<.001), but the unskilled subjects showed significantly faster impact velocity in the secondary point of impact (E3) (p<.001). Third, the forward breakfall of the martial arts did not show any difference between left and right side in the reaction force, but unskilled subjects proved a significantly greater forward and backward reaction force in the secondary point of impact(E3) both right and left sides (right: p<.01, left: p<.001). The skilled subjects showed a significantly greater vertical reaction force in the primary point of impact (E2) (right: p<.001, left: p<.001), and unskilled subjects showed a larger vertical reaction force in the secondary point of impact (E3), respectively (right: p<.01, left: p<.05).